Any two sonnets? How fun! Well, I'm going to focus my answer on the idea of love persisting "despite time's ravages." Two of the best sonnets ever written on this topic are Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 which says, "Love's not time's fool" describing a love that can survive anything: "that looks on Tempests and is not shaken." Another sonnet on this topic (also by Mr. Shakespeare) is Sonnet 55 which looks at the power of the poem itself to outlast time and in so doing to keep his love alive: "Not marble, nor the gilded monuments/Of princes shall outlive this powerful rhyme,/But you shall shine more bright in these contents/Than unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time." What a wonderful idea!

You may also want to check out any of the first seventeen of Shakespeare's Sonnets. "Ozymandias" by Shelley may even be helpful in your plight. Have fun!

So, till the judgment that yourself arise,You live in this, and dwell in lovers' eyes.

In other words, the loved one will remain alive in Shakespeare's verse until Judgment Day and afterwards will undoubtedly dwell in heaven for eternity.

Sonnet 55 seems to be set in a cemetery, and there is a strong suggestion that the person to whom it is addressed has recently died, especially in the words "So, till the judgment that yourself arise." So the sonnet would be an elegy, somewhat similar to Milton's "Lycidas" or Shelley's "Adonais."

The subjects of both sonnets have survived in Shakespeare's poems for over four hundred years and seem likely to survive for at least another four hundred. All printed copies of both poems could be destroyed by some great global catastrophe, but they would still survive in many people's memories.